---
title: "How to File a DBA (Trade Name) in Texas: Steps, Cost, and Requirements"
description: "How to register a DBA in Texas in 2026: the official term, where to file, the cost, how long it takes, and whether Texas requires newspaper publication."
canonical: https://llcattorney.com/states/tx/dba-filing-texas
image: https://llcattorney.com/images/share-cover.png
source_path: /states/tx/dba-filing-texas
---

## Texas DBA at a Glance

Requirement

Detail

Official term

Assumed Name (DBA)

Where to file

Texas Secretary of State (for LLCs and corporations via SOSDirect); County Clerk (for sole proprietors and general partnerships)

Filing fee

$25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk)

Renewal period

Every 10 years - an Assumed Name Certificate is effective for up to 10 years from the filing date; renewal requires filing a new Form 503 within 6 months of expiration; Texas provides no grace period after expiration

Publication required

No

In Texas, a DBA is officially called a Assumed Name (DBA) and is filed at the county level with the Texas Secretary of State (for LLCs and corporations via SOSDirect); County Clerk (for sole proprietors and general partnerships). The filing fee ranges $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk), and registrations must be renewed every Every 10 years - an Assumed Name Certificate is effective for up to 10 years from the filing date; renewal requires filing a new Form 503 within 6 months of expiration; Texas provides no grace period after expiration. Texas does not require newspaper publication, making the process more straightforward than in states with publication mandates. This page covers the Texas-specific filing steps, the DBA vs. LLC decision framework, and renewal requirements.

## What Is a DBA in Texas?

In Texas, the official term for a DBA is a **Assumed Name (DBA)**. A DBA is a registration that allows a person or business entity to operate under a name that is different from their legal name. It does not create a new legal entity, does not provide liability protection, and does not give you trademark rights over the name. It is simply a public disclosure that "this name is being used by this person or entity."

Any sole proprietor, partnership, LLC, or corporation that conducts business under a name other than its registered legal name must file a Assumed Name (DBA) in Texas. Common uses include freelancers operating under a business name, LLCs running multiple brand lines under one entity, and established businesses launching a new product line under a distinct brand.

County-Level Filing Note

Unlike most states where DBA registrations go through a central state office like the Secretary of State, Texas handles fictitious business name registrations at the county level. You file with the County Clerk in the county where your principal place of business is located. If you operate in multiple counties, you may need to file in each county separately. The Secretary of State does not process DBA filings for Texas businesses.

Filing Jurisdiction Note

Both state and county - LLCs and corporations file Form 503 with the Texas Secretary of State via SOSDirect; sole proprietors and general partnerships file with the county clerk in each county where they conduct business (per HB 3609 effective September 1, 2019, entities are no longer required to also file at the county level).

Before filing, confirm your chosen name is available by searching the Texas Secretary of State name database at [mycpa.cpa.state.tx.us](https://mycpa.cpa.state.tx.us). A name search does not reserve the name or prevent someone else from filing it before you.

## DBA vs. LLC -- Do You Need a DBA or an LLC?

A DBA and an LLC are not interchangeable. A DBA is a name registration. An LLC is a legal entity. The decision between them depends on what you actually need:

-   **You only need a business name for branding.** If you are a sole proprietor who wants to market under a trade name and your personal assets are not at significant risk, a DBA is sufficient and costs far less than forming an LLC.
-   **You need liability protection.** If you are entering contracts, taking on debt, or operating in a field with liability exposure, a DBA gives you none of that protection. An LLC separates your personal assets from business claims. A DBA does not.
-   **You already have an LLC and want a trade name.** An existing LLC can file a DBA in Texas to operate under an additional brand name without forming a second entity. This is often the right answer for multi-brand operations.
-   **You want to bring in partners or investors.** A DBA has no ownership structure. If you are splitting revenue with partners, taking on investors, or need a formal ownership agreement, you need an LLC or other entity, not a DBA.

For a detailed comparison, see our [DBA vs. LLC guide](/planning-a-business/dba-vs-llc).

## When a DBA Is the Right Choice

A DBA is not a second-best option. For many businesses, it is exactly the right tool. Use it when:

-   **You are a freelancer or sole proprietor** who wants to operate under a professional business name without the overhead of forming and maintaining an LLC.
-   **Your LLC runs multiple brands.** Instead of forming a separate LLC for each product line, one LLC can hold multiple DBA names in Texas, keeping accounting and compliance simple.
-   **You are testing a business concept.** A DBA lets you launch under a brand name quickly and inexpensively before committing to the full cost and ongoing compliance of an LLC.
-   **You need a trade name to open a business bank account.** Banks require a DBA registration to open an account under a name other than your legal name. A filed DBA certificate satisfies that requirement.

## How to File a DBA in Texas

### If You Do It Yourself

1

#### Choose a business name that meets Texas's requirements.

Your DBA name must be distinguishable from names already on file. It cannot be deceptively similar to an existing registered name. Search the Texas Secretary of State name database at [mycpa.cpa.state.tx.us](https://mycpa.cpa.state.tx.us) before filing to confirm availability. A search result showing no match does not guarantee your name is unique -- a filing by another party between your search and your submission will take priority.

2

#### Complete the Assumed Name Certificate (Form 503) for Texas.

Download or obtain the Assumed Name Certificate (Form 503) from the County Clerk's office in the county where your principal place of business is located. The form requires your legal name (or LLC name), your DBA name, your business address, and your signature. Many county clerks also offer online filing portals -- check your specific county's website at sos.texas.gov.

3

#### Submit your Assumed Name Certificate (Form 503) and pay the filing fee.

Submit the completed form to the Texas Secretary of State (for LLCs and corporations via SOSDirect); County Clerk (for sole proprietors and general partnerships). The filing fee is $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk). Processing time is typically Online filings through SOSDirect are processed within 1 to 2 business days; mail filings take up to 10 business days; 24-hour expedited processing is available for an additional $25 (total $50) and same-day processing for an additional $100 (total $125). Filing can usually be done in person, by mail, or online depending on the county. Confirm accepted payment methods with your specific county clerk.

4

#### Receive your Assumed Name (DBA) certificate and store it.

Once approved, you will receive a stamped Assumed Name (DBA) certificate (or a filed copy for online submissions). Keep the original in a secure location. You will need it to open a business bank account under your trade name, and some vendors and contract counterparties will ask for a copy. Make at least two copies immediately.

## DBA Cost in Texas

Cost Item

Amount

Notes

State / county filing fee

$25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk)

Paid to the filing agency at the time of submission

Total estimated range

$25 - $35

Filing fee only; no publication required

LLC formation (comparison)

Varies by state

For reference when evaluating DBA vs. LLC

The total cost of a Texas DBA is $25 to $35 -- just the $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk) filing fee. No publication is required, which makes Texas one of the simpler and more affordable states for DBA registration. By comparison, forming an TX LLC costs $300 in state fees -- significantly more, but it also creates a legal entity with liability protection that a DBA cannot provide.

## DBA vs. Trademark

A common misconception is that filing a DBA protects your business name against others using it. It does not. Here is the actual distinction:

-   **A DBA registration** gives you the right to operate under that name in the jurisdiction where you filed. It establishes public notice of your use. It does not prevent another business from filing the same or a similar name in a different county, state, or industry.
-   **A state trademark** provides broader protection within Texas, covering your right to use the name or mark in connection with your goods or services against others in the same state who might copy it. State trademark registration is filed with the Texas Secretary of State.
-   **A federal trademark (USPTO)** provides nationwide protection for your brand name, logo, or slogan. It is the strongest form of name protection available and blocks competitors in all 50 states from using a confusingly similar mark in the same industry.
-   **Bottom line:** If your business name is a meaningful part of your brand value, a DBA alone is not enough. Pursue a federal trademark through the USPTO. LLC Attorney offers trademark filing services for businesses that need brand protection beyond a name registration.

## What You Can Do With a TX DBA Name

A registered Assumed Name (DBA) in Texas allows you to:

-   **Open a business bank account** under your trade name. Banks require a filed DBA certificate to open an account in a name other than your legal name or LLC name.
-   **Accept checks and payments** made out to your business name rather than your personal name, creating a cleaner separation of business finances.
-   **Enter contracts under your trade name.** You can sign agreements, leases, and vendor contracts using your DBA name, with the underlying legal entity (you personally, or your LLC) as the actual contracting party.
-   **Market and advertise** under a brand name that is more descriptive, memorable, or marketable than your legal name.

What a DBA does not allow: forming a legally distinct entity, shielding personal assets from liability, or giving you exclusive rights to the name in other states or jurisdictions.

## DBA for an Existing TX LLC

An existing Texas LLC that wants to operate under a brand name different from its registered LLC name must file a Assumed Name (DBA) with the County Clerk in the county where the business operates. The LLC remains the legal entity of record for all purposes -- taxes, contracts, and liability. The DBA is simply the name presented to the public.

For example: "Sunrise Ventures LLC" files a Assumed Name (DBA) for "Blue Sky Cleaning Services." The LLC enters all contracts, pays all taxes, and holds all licenses. Customers see "Blue Sky Cleaning Services." Both are correct -- they refer to the same legal entity operating under two names.

This approach is more efficient than forming a second LLC for each brand, because it avoids duplicate formation fees, separate registered agents, separate operating agreements, and multiple annual report filings. One LLC can hold as many DBA names as needed.

## DBA-to-LLC Conversion Path

A DBA is often the right starting point, but there is a logical progression many businesses follow as they grow. Here is the typical four-stage path:

1.  **Start as a sole proprietor with a DBA.** Low cost, minimal compliance, fast to launch. You are personally liable for everything, but when you are just testing a concept, that risk may be acceptable.
2.  **Approach the revenue threshold.** When revenue approaches $50,000 per year, the liability exposure of a sole proprietorship starts to outweigh the cost savings of avoiding LLC formation. Business debt, employee claims, and contract disputes become real risks to personal assets.
3.  **Form the LLC and transfer the DBA.** File an TX LLC with the Secretary of State. After formation, either file a new Assumed Name (DBA) in the LLC name (the LLC becomes the holder of the trade name) or file an amendment to the existing DBA to reassign it to the LLC.
4.  **Run the DBA under the LLC umbrella.** The LLC becomes the entity of record for all legal, tax, and financial purposes. The DBA continues as the customer-facing brand name. If your business later expands to multiple states, each state where you operate may require a separate DBA or foreign qualification filing.

Forming the TX LLC costs $300 in state fees. LLC Attorney handles the LLC formation, the operating agreement, and the transition of your DBA filing in a single process.

## DBA Renewal in Texas

Texas Assumed Name (DBA) registrations must be renewed every 10 years - an assumed name certificate is effective for up to 10 years from the filing date; renewal requires filing a new form 503 within 6 months of expiration; texas provides no grace period after expiration. Renewal is filed with the Texas Secretary of State (for LLCs and corporations via SOSDirect); County Clerk (for sole proprietors and general partnerships) before the expiration date. Set a calendar reminder at least 60 days before the expiration date to avoid a lapse in your registration. Operating under an expired DBA registration can expose your business to legal complications and may affect your ability to open or maintain business bank accounts.

## When to Consult an Attorney

Most DBA filings are straightforward and do not require an attorney. But professional guidance is worth considering in these situations:

-   **Your chosen name is close to an existing brand.** If the name you want to register as a DBA resembles a federally trademarked brand, you could face a cease-and-desist even after filing. An attorney can assess likelihood of confusion before you invest in marketing.
-   **You are operating across multiple states.** If your business uses a DBA in more than one state, each state has different rules. An attorney can advise whether you need separate filings or whether a different entity structure makes more sense.
-   **You are transitioning from a DBA to an LLC.** The conversion is more than just forming an entity. Existing contracts, bank accounts, and vendor agreements may need to be updated. An attorney ensures the transition does not leave gaps in your legal standing.
-   **You have a co-owner.** A DBA has no built-in ownership structure. If you and a partner share a business operating under a DBA, a dispute about ownership or revenue division has no legal framework to fall back on. An LLC with an operating agreement fixes that.

In Texas, the county-level filing process adds a layer of complexity -- different counties have different procedures, deadlines, and fees. If you are operating in multiple counties or are uncertain which county controls your filing, a brief attorney consultation can prevent a defective registration.

LLC Attorney offers flat-fee attorney consultations in 30-minute increments with no retainer. You can speak with a licensed attorney about your specific Texas situation before filing.

## Compare DBA Requirements in Nearby States

State

Filing Level

Fee

Publication

Renewal

Texas (TX)

County

$25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk)

No

Every 10 years - an Assumed Name Certificate is effective for up to 10 years from the filing date; renewal requires filing a new Form 503 within 6 months of expiration; Texas provides no grace period after expiration

Oklahoma

State - Oklahoma trade names are registered with the Secretary of State at the state level; no county filing required

$25

No

No renewal required - Oklahoma trade name registrations do not expire and remain valid as long as the underlying entity is in good standing

Louisiana

State - Louisiana trade names are registered with the Secretary of State through the GeauxBiz portal at the state level; no county filing required

$75

No

Every 10 years - Louisiana trade name registrations expire after 10 years and must be renewed within 6 months of expiration for an additional $75 fee

DBA requirements vary significantly by state. The filing level (county vs. state), publication requirement, fee, and renewal period all differ across jurisdictions. If your business operates in more than one state, you will need to comply with each state's rules separately. A federal trademark registration is the only mechanism that provides nationwide name protection in a single filing.

## Texas DBA: Special Requirements

Key Texas-Specific Requirement

Texas does not require newspaper publication for a Assumed Name (DBA). Filing with the Texas Secretary of State (for LLCs and corporations via SOSDirect); County Clerk (for sole proprietors and general partnerships) and paying the $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk) fee completes the registration. This makes Texas one of the simpler states for DBA compliance.

Because Texas uses a county-level filing system, requirements can vary slightly by county. The filing fee of $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk) is a range across counties, not a uniform statewide fee. Always confirm the exact fee, form version, and submission method with the specific county clerk where your business is located before filing.

Verification date for the data on this page: June 2026. Requirements change. Always confirm current fees and procedures with the Texas Secretary of State (for LLCs and corporations via SOSDirect); County Clerk (for sole proprietors and general partnerships) before filing.

## Frequently Asked Questions

What is a DBA called in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

In Texas, a DBA is officially called a Assumed Name (DBA). The abbreviation "DBA" is used on state forms and official agency websites. The term "DBA" (doing business as) is informal but widely understood.

How do I file a DBA in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

To file a DBA in Texas, submit the Assumed Name Certificate (Form 503) to the County Clerk in the county where your business is located with the $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk) filing fee. No newspaper publication is required in Texas.

How much does a DBA cost in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

The filing fee for a Texas DBA is $25 (state filing via Secretary of State for LLCs and corporations); county fees vary, typically $10 to $35 (for sole proprietors and general partnerships filing with the county clerk). There is no publication requirement, so that is your total cost. The total ranges from $25 to $35.

How long does a DBA last in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

A Texas Assumed Name (DBA) registration is valid for Every 10 years - an Assumed Name Certificate is effective for up to 10 years from the filing date; renewal requires filing a new Form 503 within 6 months of expiration; Texas provides no grace period after expiration. You must renew before the registration expires to maintain your legal right to use the business name. Renewal is filed with the same agency that processed your original registration.

Does a DBA give me a trademark on my business name in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

No. Filing a Assumed Name (DBA) in Texas gives you the right to use the name for business transactions in the jurisdiction where you filed, but it does not give you trademark rights. A DBA is a registration of use, not an intellectual property protection. If you want exclusive rights to your business name as a brand, you must file a federal trademark with the USPTO separately.

Can an LLC use a DBA name in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes. An existing Texas LLC can file a Assumed Name (DBA) to operate under a name different from its legal LLC name. This is common when an LLC wants to run multiple product lines or brands under one legal entity. The LLC remains the legal entity of record; the DBA is the operating name used with customers, vendors, and banks.

Do I need a separate EIN for my DBA in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

No. A DBA is not a separate legal entity and does not require its own EIN. If you are a sole proprietor, you can use your Social Security Number or your existing EIN under your DBA name. If your DBA is operated by an LLC or corporation, the entity's existing EIN covers the DBA.

Can I open a bank account under my DBA name in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Yes, most banks will open a business checking account in your DBA name if you provide your filed Assumed Name (DBA) certificate. Banks typically require the original or certified copy of your DBA registration to open an account under a trade name. Some banks may also require your EIN, personal ID, and your LLC formation documents if the DBA is held by an LLC.

What happens if I operate under an unregistered DBA in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Operating under a fictitious business name without filing a Assumed Name (DBA) in Texas can result in civil penalties, loss of the right to enforce contracts made under that name, and difficulty opening business bank accounts. Courts in some jurisdictions have dismissed breach-of-contract claims brought by businesses that failed to register their DBA name.

Is a DBA the same as an LLC in Texas?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

No. A DBA is just a name registration, not a legal entity. It provides no liability protection. An LLC is a separate legal entity that shields your personal assets from most business liabilities. If you are a sole proprietor using a DBA, you remain personally responsible for all business debts and lawsuits. Forming an LLC in Texas costs $300 in state fees and creates a genuine liability barrier.

When should I convert my Texas DBA to an LLC?

![icon](/_next/image?url=%2Fimages%2Ficons%2FfaqPlus.png&w=128&q=75)

Consider converting your DBA to an LLC when your business revenue approaches $50,000 per year, when you take on business debt, when you hire employees, or when you enter into significant contracts. At those thresholds, the personal liability exposure of operating as a sole proprietor under a DBA becomes a real financial risk. Forming an Texas LLC costs $300 in state fees and takes effect from the formation date.

## Outgrown Your DBA? Form a Texas LLC

A Assumed Name (DBA) gets you a business name, but it offers no liability protection and no separation between your personal assets and your business. If your revenue is approaching $50,000 per year, if you are taking on employees, or if you are entering contracts where a lawsuit is a real possibility, a Texas LLC is the logical next step. The Assumed Name (DBA) registration process is also a good moment to evaluate whether the business you are building warrants a proper legal structure from the start.

LLC Attorney forms Texas LLCs — including a professionally drafted operating agreement. The state filing fee is $300. You get a separate legal entity, a liability barrier, and a foundation that can accommodate partners, investors, and growth — none of which a DBA provides.

[Form a Texas LLC](https://app.llcattorney.com/formation?intake_type=formation&companyState=Texas)

## Related Guides

-   [DBA vs. LLC: Which Structure Is Right for Your Business?](/planning-a-business/dba-vs-llc)
-   [What Is a DBA? The Complete Guide to Doing Business As Names](/small-business-blog/business-formation/what-is-a-dba)
-   [Does a DBA Need an EIN? IRS Rules for Trade Names](/small-business-blog/does-dba-need-ein)
-   [How to Form an LLC in Texas: Step-by-Step Guide](/states/tx/llc-formation-texas)